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Fascism: History and Theory

von David Renton

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Across Europe and the world, far right parties have been enjoying greater electoral success than at any time since 1945. Right-wing street movements draw huge supporters and terrorist attacks on Jews and Muslims proliferate. It sometimes seems we are returning to the age of fascism.0To explain this disturbing trend, David Renton surveys the history of fascism in Europe from its pre-war origins to the present day, examining Marxist responses to fascism in the age of Hitler and Mussolini, the writings of Trotsky and Gramsci and contemporary theorists. Renton theorises that fascism was driven by the chaotic and unstable balance between reactionary ambitions and the mass character of its support. This approach will arm a new generation of anti-fascists to resist those who seek to re-enact fascism.0Rewritten and revised for the twentieth anniversary of its first publication, Renton's classic book synthesises the Marxist theory of fascism and updates it for our own times.… (mehr)
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In this very interesting book author tries to give definition of what fascism is. He tries to define it from the perspective of the mass movement that caused fascism to rise its ugly head and ha dto confront it first - socialist revolution in Russia in 1917.

Author starts from the "left definition" of fascism as just another tool of bourgeoisie against the socialist revolution, over the "right definition" of fascism as general threat to society to finally end up with a dialectical analysis of a fascism as a mass reactionary movement. While first two definitions try to simplify the fascism they cannot explain its nature and why people decide to join it. Because people did join it and they weren't all necessary evil people but people that found themselves in deep troubles (economically) after the WW1. While suitable for political purposes (especially Russian Soviets attempt of obtaining control over the International) these simplified approaches just could not provide good enough explanations. It fails because there were movements that were military juntas and dictatorships but they never became fascism dictatorships and devolved very soon to normal society.

Explanation of fascism as mass reactionary movement manages to explain paradoxical nature of fascism as a movement that on one hand mobilizes the masses against the big capital but on other hand works hand in hand with big capital against any opposition to it. This schizophrenic nature of fascism enables it to basically keep under control all parts of the society (divide and conquer) and rule them all through further corruption of existing state mechanisms [until total control is achieved]. And while fall of society continues (since fascism being highly unstable structure cannot provide stability because it would mean the end of it) fascism slowly turns more and more to violence and oppression, first internally and then externally. This explanation was rejected at first because of inability to acknowledge that ordinary people could join reactionary movement. But what else is to expect in case when revolutionary movement declares whole classes of people as enemies of the revolution. What is to expect when middle class, that worked hard but never achieved fortune that would make them independent, now sees lower classes (factory workers) living better than them. When one class of society gets restricted and it cannot grow and move up, reactionary movement will find fertile ground. And with fascism violence follows very close. And at first fascism looks very much like revolutionary movement which is first trap it lays down for masses to step on.

And this is something that we need to be aware in our times. Radicalism of every kind will only create oppositional radicalism. Declaring whole parts of the nation as enemies of the state, declaring that they constantly crawl through the mud and apologize constantly will just create atmosphere were more and more radical movements will pop up and there is nothing more radical than fascism.

Highly recommended book. ( )
  Zare | Jan 23, 2024 |
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Across Europe and the world, far right parties have been enjoying greater electoral success than at any time since 1945. Right-wing street movements draw huge supporters and terrorist attacks on Jews and Muslims proliferate. It sometimes seems we are returning to the age of fascism.0To explain this disturbing trend, David Renton surveys the history of fascism in Europe from its pre-war origins to the present day, examining Marxist responses to fascism in the age of Hitler and Mussolini, the writings of Trotsky and Gramsci and contemporary theorists. Renton theorises that fascism was driven by the chaotic and unstable balance between reactionary ambitions and the mass character of its support. This approach will arm a new generation of anti-fascists to resist those who seek to re-enact fascism.0Rewritten and revised for the twentieth anniversary of its first publication, Renton's classic book synthesises the Marxist theory of fascism and updates it for our own times.

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